MARK ROTHKO
Mark Rothko (1903-1970, born Marcus Rothkowitz in Dvinsk,
Russia) is one of the great 20th century American artists. A huge
amount of material that has grown up around Rothko. Like Vincent
van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Claude Monet and Leonardo da Vinci, Mark
Rothko has been lionized by hundreds of art critics. Rothko remains
a greatly admired painter. His works will not, it seems, reach the
same mass audiences as Monet or van Gogh, perhaps because Rothko is
an abstract artist, and very few abstract artists achieve the mega
stature of figurative painters such as van Gogh or Monet.
Abstract art of the Mark Rothko kind - the colourfield skeins of
Morris Louis, or the black stripes of polychrome shaped canvases of
Frank Stella, or the bold, black, calligraphic brushstrokes of
Franz Kline - has yet to become as widely accepted as Gustav
Klimt's nudes or Sandro Botticelli's Madonnas. In the art world
itself, though, Mark Rothko is a highly celebrated painter. He
appears in the 20th century Olympian pantheon alongside Jackson
Pollock, Piet Mondrian, Paul Klee, Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper
Johns.
Mark Rothko's art has been seen by critics as 'transcendent'
(Ashton, Robertson), 'a sort of spiritual Stonehenge' (Brookner),
'lavish self-indulgence' (Kozloff), 'Dionysian' (Hobbs), 'sensuous
and and spiritual' (Waldman), 'enormous, beautiful, opaque
surfaces' (Selz), 'enigmatic, gripping presence' (Goldwater),
'incandescent color' (Greenberg), 'haunting' (Sylvester),
'visionary simplicity' (Sandler) and 'tinted hallucinatory cloth'
(de Kooning). For poet John Ashbery, Rothko 'seems to eliminate
criticism'.
The archetypal response to Mark Rothko's art is that it is a (1)
'heroic', (2) 'transcendent', (3) 'spiritual' and (4) 'tragic' art.
These are four of the most commonly deployed adjectives in Rothko
art criticism (others include 'Buddhist', 'Faustian' and
'death-conscious'). Rothko's painting is seen as (1) 'heroic'
because it attempts achieve something great in a world of
Existential suffering. Out the slime and the pain and the horror of
modern life rise Rothko's 'heroic' canvases. His canvases become a
gesture of affirmation in amongst the global angst (as with
Rothko's contemporaries, such as Pollock and Newman).
Includes new illustrations.
General
Imprint: |
Crescent Moon Publishing
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
March 2011 |
First published: |
March 2011 |
Authors: |
Julia Davis
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156 x 7mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
140 |
Edition: |
4th Revised ed. |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-86171-314-8 |
Categories: |
Books >
Arts & Architecture >
History of art / art & design styles >
General
|
LSN: |
1-86171-314-2 |
Barcode: |
9781861713148 |
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